Niger-Congo definition
Examples of Niger-Congo in a sentence
Many Niger-Congo languages are notable for their ubiquitous agreement.
Almost all language families of the Niger-Congo phylum have nominal classes expressed by affixes called class markers (CM).
The lexicostatistic base of ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇'▇ reclassification of Niger-Congo with particular reference to the cohesion of Bantu.
The first case of nasal agreement that we consider is found in Ngbaka, a Niger-Congo language spoken in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (▇▇▇▇▇▇ 1963, 1970, ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ 1965).
The most well-known feature of Niger-Congo languages is their system of noun classification, which can be traced in some form in almost every branch (Welmers 1973:159).
In many Niger-Congo languages, a noun may belong to a specific class because of the semantic characteristics of its referent; see Creissels (1991:91ff) for examples.
Lamnso, like Bantu and many languages in the Niger-Congo family, has a system of noun classes marked by (C)V affixes that attach to the noun stem.
Stem-initial prominence in West and Central Africa: Niger-Congo, areal, or both.
Ethnologue notes that there were approximately 375,000 speakers in 2006 and classifies the language within the Niger-Congo family (▇▇▇▇▇, 2009).
In many Niger-Congo languages, a noun may belong to a specific class because of the semantic characteristics of its referent, see Creissels (1991:91ff) for examples.